Come and enjoy the exhibit A Herança e a Indagação dos Enigmas (Inheritance and Inquiry of Enigmas) at CCBB. The exhibit of the Peruvian artist Pedro Caballero is rich in symbols, mysteries and traditions.

The exhibit features works that transcend abstraction and realism, with strong references to pre-Inca cultures that will most certainly arouse the interest of the citizens of Brasília and the international community residing in the city.

Pedro Caballero is a Peruvian artist who studied and graduated in the School of Art of Lima and went to Europe to study in museums and galleries in Paris and Madrid.

The exhibition has 39 works in oil painting, with a retrospective of works from 1994 to 2016.

The art of Caballero takes us from the past to the present and shows us a future that we have to build, with harmony, aesthetics and innovation. The message is clear and relevant to our society.

In 2013 the collection “Não Matarás”, by José Zaragoza, was donated to Museu Nacional. The title refers to the military coup of 1964. The exhibit can be seen from August to October in Brasília.

The exhibit presents works by 42 Brazilian artists. One of the highlights is the presence of João Câmara, whose work "Exposição & Motivos de Violência", 1967, of the collection of the Museum of Art of Brasília (MAB), was the winner of the Grand Prize of the 4th Hall of Modern Art of the DF.

The Colombian Embassy in Brazil brings the photography exhibit “Sobre Solidões” as part of the celebration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Colombian photographer Leo Matiz (1917-2017) and 50 years after the first publication of the novel "Cem Anos de Solidão" by Gabriel García Márquez.

The exhibition includes texts or passages about characters and situations of the saga of the Buendia family during their journey from the mountains to the Caribbean Sea to found the mythical Macondo for seven generations.

The exhibit “Sobre o Sangue” (On the Blood) is at Museu dos Correios (Correios Museum) until September 10. Arthur Gomes is the curator of the showing that features works by António Obá, Bia Leite, Débora Passos, Gija Poncã, Henrique Matheus, José de Deus, La Conga Rosa, Laura Fraiz-Grijalba, Liana Falcão and LUVS.

Based on the need to occupy spaces and give visibility to artists and groups that are sometimes marginalized and undervalued, the exhibit brings together works by ten artists with the aim of portraying the veiled violence that we suffer in everyday life.

The works provoke reflections, annoyances and restlessness, in addition to inviting the visitor to reflect on society and its role in the face of these microviolences that surround it.

Venue: Museu dos Correios (Correios Museum)

Where: Setor Comercial Sul, Quadra 4, Bloco A – Asa Sul

When: Visitations until September 10. Tuesday to Friday, from 10 am to 7 pm; Weekends, from 2 pm to 6 pm

The works create a fable around history and fiction. Some paintings make references to deteriorated urban landscapes, vacant lots, roads, ruins, and buildings. The historical references go from the mannerisms to the romantic landscape.

There are acrylic and oil paintings on canvas, several with frames manufactured in mixed technique, of different format, produced between 2008 and 2016.

Venue: Museu dos Correios (Correios Museum)

Where: Setor Comercial Sul, Quadra 4, Bloco A – Asa Sul

When: Visitations until September 3. Tuesday to Friday, from 10 am to 7 pm; Weekends, from 2 pm to 6 pm

The exhibit “Entre Nós” (Between Us - The human figure in the MASP collection) opens in Brasília on July 18 and runs until September. MASP Museum holds the largest collection of art in Latin America.

Van Gogh, Gauguin, Goya, Velászquez, Manet, Modigliani, Degas, Renoir and Picasso are some of the great names that will be united to Brazilian masters such as Candido Portinari, Djanira, Vicente do Rego Monteiro, Carlos Prado, Burle Marx and José Pancetti.

The idea is to present the transformation of society and of art itself over the centuries using the works of some of the great names of art in different artistic movements, from pre-Columbian art to modern photography, through icons of Yoruba art and the art of the periods of the Pre-Renaissance, Renaissance, Enlightenment, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism , Modernism and contemporary art.

A poetic-ethnographic journey into Brazil between the late 1960s and early 1980s through the eyes of German photographer Leonore Mau is the theme of the exhibit “A Casa de Leonore Mau” (The House of Leonore Mau). The exhibit opens at CCBB on July 4.

Held by the Goethe-Institut Brasilia and Goethe-Institut Porto Alegre, in partnership with the German Embassy, the exhibition brings about 140 images produced by the German photographer showing various aspects of the daily life in Brazil during the period of the military dictatorship.

The images show child labor, social maladjustment in the streets, architecture, carnival, Brazil natural beauties and Afro-Brazilian religious ceremonies.

The artistic and avant-garde trajectory of Flávio de Carvalho is highlighted in the exhibit “Expedicionário”, which opens at Caixa Cultural in June.

The exhibit brings together a rich iconographic and textual material resulting from the expeditionary projects of this modernist multi-artist. Amanda Bonan and Renato Rezende are the curators of the exhibit that shows photographs, documents, travel notebooks and newspaper articles.